When misfortune occurs, many times people are more willing to turn to God.

Traditionally, evangelicals and pentecostals are much more likely to be biblical creationists. Currently, there are about 550,000 evangelicals and pentecostals in Italy. The make up about 1% of the population of Italy.

Italy has a big sub replacement level of fertility problem

However, Italy has a sub replacement level of fertility at 1.38 birth per woman. This is far below a replacement level of fertility of 2.1 births per woman. Of course, this means that there is a possibility that immigration will have a increased effect on the religious demography of Italy in the future.

Given the growth of global Christianity/creationism and the growth of internet evangelism , immigration could increasingly cause more Christian creationists to immigrate to Italy. Currently, global Christianity and creationism is growing and global atheism and agnosticism are shrinking.

Kaufmann declared to a secular audience in a lecture titled Shall the religious inherit the earth: "The trends that are happening worldwide inevitably in an age of globalization are going to affect us."

What of European Christianity? The conventional wisdom holds it to be in free fall, especially in Western Europe. (Bruce 2002) This is undoubtedly correct for Catholic Europe, while Protestant Europe already has low levels of religious practice. Yet closer scrutiny reveals an increasingly lively and demographically growing Christian remnant. Several studies have examined the connection between religiosity - whether defined as attendance, belief or affiliation - and fertility in Europe. Most find a statistically significant effect even when controlling for age, education, income, marital status and other factors...

Moving to the wider spectrum of European Christianity, we find that fertility is indeed much higher among European women who are religious...

Today, most of those who remain religious in Europe wear their beliefs lightly, but conservative Christianity is hardly a spent force. Data on conservative Christians is difficult to come by since many new churches keep few official records. Reports from the World Christian Database, which meticulously tracks reports from church bodies, indicates that 4.1 percent of Europeans (including Russians) were evangelical Christians in 2005. This figure rises to 4.9 percent in northern, western and southern Europe. Most religious conservatives are charismatics, working within mainstream denominations like Catholicism or Lutheranism to ‘renew’ the faith along more conservative lines. There is also an important minority of Pentecostals, who account for .5% of Europe’s population. Together, charismatics and Pentecostals account for close to 5 % of Europe’s population. The proportion of conservative Christians has been rising, however: some estimate that the trajectory of conservative Christian growth has outpaced that of Islam in Europe. (Jenkins 2007: 75).

In many European countries, the proportion of conservative Christians is close to the number who are recorded as attending church weekly. This would suggest an
increasingly devout Christian remnant is emerging in western Europe which is more resistant to secularization. This shows up in France, Britain and Scandinavia (less
Finland), the most secular countries where we have 1981, 1990 and 2000 EVS and 2004 ESS data on religiosity...

Currently there are more evangelical Christians than Muslims in Europe. (Jenkins 2007: 75) In Eastern Europe, as outside the western world, Pentecostalism is a sociological and not a demographic phenomenon. In Western Europe, by contrast, demography is central to evangelicalism’s growth, especially in urban areas. Alas, immigration brings two foreign imports, Islam and Christianity, to secular Europe.

Italy choosing between Christian immigrants and Muslim immigrants in the future

I realize that Italy recently recently has had problems with their Muslim immigrants from Northern Africa which probably came mostly from their former colonies. Most of these immigrants are Muslim creationists due to the unpopularity of Darwinism within Islam.

However, perhaps with rapid growth of global Christianity, Italy may be able to be more selective in the future in terms of their immigrants. Given a choice between unskilled Muslim immigrants who have rioted throughout Europe and higher skilled, hard working Bible believing immigrants with the Protestant work ethic, Italy may choose the Christian immigrants.

Evangelicalism and Italy

As you can see from the resources below, Bible church planting is occurring in Italy:

Leonardo De Chirico (1967) has planted and pastored a Reformed Baptist church in Ferrara (northren Italy) from 1997 to 2007. He is now leading a church planting project in Rome.

He earned degrees in History (University of Bologna), Theology (ETCW, Bridgend, Wales) and Bioethics (University of Padova). His PhD is from King’s College (London) and it was published as Evangelical Theological Perspectives on Post-Vatican II Roman Catholicism (Bern-Oxford: Peter Lang 2003). He is Adjunct Director of Istituto di Formazione Evangelica e Documentazione (Padova), editor of its theological journal Studi diteologia, and director of the Center for Ethics and Bioethics (CSEB). He is also vice-chairman of the Italian Evangelical Alliance. Together with Pietro Bolognesi and Andrea Ferrari he has been general editor of the Dizionario di teologia evangelica (2007). He is married to Valeria and they have two children, Filippo and Akille.

In addition, with the growing financial problems in Italy it could cause people to focus on their faith more. During the Great Depression in the United States churches which emphasized holiness grew and so did pentecostal Christianity (I realize there can be considerable overlap as many pentecostal church also emphasize holiness). Both of these types of protestantism tend to support creationism. In Mexico, evangelical churches growing quickly in a society which is undergoing significant financial and political problems.

Although churches are being planted in Italy, there are some current challenges with church planting in Italy due to churches becoming isolated from society, biblically unfaithful, or dying. Of course, the Question Evolution! Campaign and its 15 questions for evolutionist can assist with bolstering people's rejection of Darwinism and confidence in the Bible if it is supplemented with other Christian apologetic materials.

Also, please watch the videos below which discuss the Christian mission field of Italy.

Do we want to translate the Question evolution campaign into Italian? Yes, we want to translate the Question Evolution! Campaign into Italian. Our group has some contacts within the Italian-American community.

To find out why we want to translate the campaign into Italian, please read the rest of this article and these articles as well:

"Bible-based criticism of evolution, once limited to Protestant fundamentalists in the United States, has become an issue in France now that Pope Benedict and some leading Catholic theologians have criticized the neo-Darwinist view of creation...

These American concerns caught notice in Europe after Vienna Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, a confidant of Pope Benedict, attacked neo-Darwinist theories in 2005 in what seemed to be a move to ally the Catholic Church with "intelligent design."...

Herve Le Guyader, a University of Paris biology professor who advised the Education Ministry on the Atlas, said high school biology teachers needed more training now to respond to the increasingly open challenges to the theory of evolution.

Traditionally, Italians have had a disproportionate amount of influence on the Roman Catholic Church.

For example, in January 2012, a news article titled The Pope’s New Cardinals — More Roman Than Catholic?proclaimed:

Pope Benedict XVI’s announcement on 6 January of 22 new cardinals shows that he is continuing a pattern of stacking the College of Cardinals with Europeans (mainly Italians) and with leaders of the Roman curia, the papal bureaucracy whose officials are often considered more conservative than prelates in dioceses around the world.

Of course, with sub replacement fertility rates in many European countries and in Italy the disproportionate dominance of Italians and Europeans in the Roman Catholic Church hierarchy could change.This may not bode well for theistic evolutionary beliefs and atheistic Darwinism given the growth of creationism in the world at large.